Summify, a social content aggregator, announced on Thursday that it had been bought over by Twitter, and it will aid the microblogging giant work on helping users "connect and engage with relevant, timely news".

The Canada-based startup announced the deal on its corporate blog on Thursday, although no financial details were disclosed. Summify works by allowing users to aggregate content from their social media accounts into daily summaries sent to subscribers' e-mail or mobile phones.

"Our long-term vision at Summify has always been to connect people with the most relevant news for them, in the most time-efficient manner. As hundreds of millions of people worldwide are signing up and consuming Twitter, we realized it's the best platform to execute our vision at a truly global scale," the company stated.

Twitter spokesperson Carolyn Penner was cited by tech news site Wired on Thursday saying co-founders Cristian Strat and Mircea Pasoi had created a product that "curates the best and most important stories in your Twitter timeline and Facebook newsfeed".

According to a Romanian business news site, Pasoi and Strat are two Romanian "hackers" who were passionate about technology and Internet startups. They both turned down job offers from Google and Facebook earlier in their careers, and had founded balaur.ro, a Romanian job search engine, it stated.

The co-founders, together with three other employees, will be joining Twitter's Growth team in its San Francisco office, Summify said.